Capital Commerce

What Obama's Cap-And-Trade Plan Will Cost You

By James Pethokoukis

Posted: March 3, 2009

A study from the George C. Marshall Institute tries to quantify the costs of a cap-and-trade plan to reduce carbon emissions. They're not small, to say the least: And although this study uses 2008 as a baseline, the Obama plan would hit in 2012 and could come in combo with a hike in investment and incomes taxes for wealthier Americans and the creation of a special healthcare tax:

The authors find that the constraints posed by the Lieberman-Warner cap-and-trade approach is equivalent to a constant (in percentage terms) consumption decrease of about 1% each year, continuing to 2050. Put another way, the cap-and-trade approach is the equivalent of a permanent tax increase for the average American household, which was estimated to be $1,100 in 2008, would rise to $1,437 by 2015, to $1,979 in 2030, and $2,979 in 2050.

Reviewing a host of recent studies, Buckley and Mityakov show that estimates of job losses attributable to cap-and-trade range in the hundreds of thousands. The price for energy paid by the American consumer also will rise. The studies reviewed showed electricity prices jumping 5-15% by 2015, natural gas prices up 12-50% by 2015, and gasoline prices up 9-145% by 2015. As an illustration, gasoline would suffer a 16 cent price increase per gallon at the low end of the estimates to a $2.58 penalty at the high end (using the January 2009 reported retail price of $1.78 per gallon).

seasonal decrease climatic change business

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remondnaso of AL @ Nov 26, 2009 06:15:15 AM

RE: just the begining

That entire post is based on the assumption that people will just continue to pay what they are currently paying also there are technologies out there that might help in this endevor in Scientific American it was higlighted that we could have a near completely sustainable energy grid by 2030. And maybe just maybe we Americans learn to be energy savvy. This is not going to be easy and this has the potential to threaten everybody on the planet.

GARRAT E COOPER II of VA @ Nov 25, 2009 16:42:36 PM

cheaper than wars

It boggles the mind that Americans would rather go to war over oil than to support cap and trade! And you can flap your lips all day long because if Iraq did not have oil, we would not be there! According to economist that if the Iraq war ended today American tax payers are in debt to the tune of trillions for this war which george bush fed us thru lies deceit and manipulation of information.

geraldine of TX @ Nov 20, 2009 09:20:57 AM

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Capital Commerce

Capital Commerce

U.S. News business reporter Matthew Bandyk examines the issues, people, and debates that shape the nexus of political and economic life in the nation's capital.

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